Archive for the ‘General’ Category

Repair Money for your new Home!

Friday, March 7th, 2008

 If you are buying a home here in our Macomb County marketplace and your considering a house that needs to have some rehabilitation done.  The product is called a FHA Streamline 203k loan……check out some of the things you can do with this great home loan.

What eligible improvements are acceptable under the $5,000 minimum requirement?

A. Structural alterations and reconstruction (e.g., repair or replacement of structural damage, chimney repair, additions to the structure, installation of an additional bath(s), skylights, finished attics and/or basements, repair of termite damage and the treatment against termites or other insect infestation, etc.).

B. Changes for improved functions and modernization (e.g., remodeled bathrooms and kitchens, including permanently installed appliances, i.e., built-in range and/or oven, range hood, microwave, dishwasher).

C. Elimination of health and safety hazards (including the resolution of defective paint surfaces or lead-based paint problems on homes built prior to 1978).

D. Changes for aesthetic appeal and elimination of obsolescence (e.g., new exterior siding, adding a second story to the home, covered porch, stair railings, attached carport).

E. Reconditioning or replacement of plumbing (including connecting to public water and/or sewer system), heating, air conditioning and electrical systems. Installation of new plumbing fixtures is acceptable, including interior whirlpool bathtubs.

F Installation of well and/or septic system. The well or septic system must be installed or repaired prior to beginning any other repairs to the property. A property less than 1/2 acre with a separate well or septic system is not acceptable; also, a property less than 1 acre with both a well and a septic system is unacceptable. Lots smaller than these sizes, usually have problems in the future; however, the local HUD Field Office can approve smaller lot size requirements where the local health authority can justify smaller lots. The installation of a new well or the repair of an existing well (used for the primary water source to the property) can be allowed provided there is adequate documentation to show there is reason to believe the well will produce a sufficient amount of potable water for the occupants. (A well log of surrounding properties from the local health authority is acceptable documentation.) Refer to HUD Handbook 4910.1, Appendix K, for additional information.

G. Roofing, gutters and downspouts.

H. Flooring, tiling and carpeting.

I. Energy conservation improvements (e.g., new double pane windows, steel insulated exterior doors, insulation, solar domestic hot water systems, caulking and weather stripping, etc.).

J. Major landscape work and site improvement (e.g., patios, decks and terraces that improve the value of the property equal to the dollar amount spent on the improvements or required to preserve the property from erosion). The correction of grading and drainage problems is also acceptable. Tree removal is acceptable if the tree is a safety hazard to the property. Repair of existing walks and driveway is acceptable if it may affect the safety of the property. (Fencing, new walks and driveways, and general landscape work (i.e., trees, shrubs, seeding or sodding) cannot be in the first $5000 requirement.)

K. Improvements for accessibility to a disabled person (e.g., remodeling kitchens and baths for wheelchair access, lowering kitchen cabinets, installing wider doors and exterior ramps, etc.). Related fixtures such as new cooking ranges, refrigerators, and other appurtenances, as well as general painting are also eligible; however, it must be in addition to the $5,000 requirement.

$100 Down Payment on HUD Homes

Thursday, March 6th, 2008

Wonderful news was announced with HUD homes for sale
and FHA financing in Michigan.

I’ve spent some time on getting the details on this new program rolled out by HUD.

In Michigan you can purchase a HUD home for $100 down
and if you are using an FHA mortgage HUD will also gift you with $2500
that you may use towards your closing costs or to pay for repairs. 

One area that I spent some time on was getting clarification
from FHA on whether this $2500 is above and beyond the 3% in
sellers concessions that HUD currently allows
to be paid on a buyers
behalf if so requested. After many hours spent talking with the HUD
marketing team for our state, with FHA, and with underwriting supervisors
it was revealed that both sellers concessions from HUD and the “incentive”
of $2500 could be used on the buyers behalf.

HUD still hasn’t waived it’s minimum good faith deposit of $1000 for an
offer to purchase, but that initial $1000 may be all most buyers need out
of pocket to purchase a home once the FHA incentive and HUD sellers
concessions are used.

If you are going to take advantage of this program be sure that
your real estate agent and your mortgage lender know how to draw up
the contract so that both the gift from HUD and the sellers concessions are
applied in your purchase agreement.

Please feel free to contact me with any questions you may have about this wonderful home buyers program and to see if
it fits your current home buying needs. I would also be happy to refer you to one of my real estate agent partners who knows how to find many HUD homes currently on the market for sale.

Good Old Sears…

Thursday, March 6th, 2008

 

The Way It Used To Be

 

The New York Times had a nice article over the weekend regarding Sears kit homes. These were houses you could buy from a catalog. You’d place your order and then a kit would show up ready for assembly. Between 1908 and 1940, says the article, more than 100,000 kit homes were sold.

The part in the article that jumped out, however, had very little to do with wooden parts or windows. The paper interviewed Amy R. Pappas, co-curator of the New Castle Historical Society, and here’s what was reported:

“In the 1930s, during the Depression, the housing market took a sharp downturn, and by 1940, Sears stopped selling kit homes, as many people had lost their jobs and defaulted on their loans. In 1934, Sears liquidated more than $11 million in mortgages and stopped financing kit purchases.

“’Because Sears did not want to be known as a heartless corporation that took people’s homes from them,’” said Ms. Pappas, the curator in New Castle, “’it absorbed most of the losses.’”

Imagine that! A lender that absorbed losses rather than ruin its reputation — even though the lender was not the source of bad loans, bizarre terms or toxic clauses.

Whatever happened to such lenders?

What is Landlordbusters?

Thursday, February 7th, 2008

Hello, and thank you for taking the time to visit Landlordbusters.com. My name is Jeff Marsack and I am the landlordbuster-in-chief. I am a veteran mortgage broker working in Metro Detroit but specializing in Macomb, Oakland & St. Clair County. My goal it is to provide would be homeowners with valuable free information to help them achieve their goal of owning their piece of the American dream. I’m also a specialist in helping achieve that goal without spending much more money then it would cost to rent a new apartment. 

Utilizing programs such as the FHA loan program as well as the USDA Rural Home Loan Program we are having great success in this crazy Michigan Mortgage market with still getting folks into a new home with very little money out of pocket. I am also very experienced with the Veterans Administration or VA loan for those who serve our country in the military.

In addition to handling your Home Loan needs, we also have a dedicated team of professionals in the real estate industry, ready and willing to help with all your needs. Including:

Real Estate Agents, Home Inspectors, Insurance Agents, Financial Consultants, Lawyers, Moving Companies, and more..

So if you are looking to buy yourself or your family a home in Macomb, Oakland, or St Clair County, and you don’t want to spend a ton of money out of your pocket….then it would be my previlage to help get you started on your road to homeownership.

Please also take the time to click around on the various BLOG entries and links I’ve added and also feel free to order some of my FREE Buyer Reports located in the section up above, Enjoy!

Sincerely,

Jeff